Box 2
Contains 13 Results:
Photocopy of a "Memphis Press-Scimitar" Article (Contains a mention of Sunny's performance in a play), March 23, 1939
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"Skagg's Wife" A Folk Play of South East Mississippi by Phredonia Eates Welch , ca 1930s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"River: A Magazine in the Deep South", No. 2 (Contains an essay written by Theodore C. Hoepfner), April 1937
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"Tradition and William Blake": A Thesis by Theodore C. Hoepfner with handwritten edits, ca. 1930s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"Because I Could Not Stop for Death" Essay by Theodore C. Hoepfner, ca. 1930s - 1940s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"A Phase of the History of the Drama in Mephis, Tennessee: The Sock and Buskin Club" by Theodore C. Hoepfner, ca. 1940s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
Various Essays on Shakespeare by Theodore C. Hoepfner, ca. 1940s - 1950s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
"From Cocoon Forth" by Theodore C. Hoepfner (Contains a handwritten note from George Marion O'Donnell), ca. 1930s - 1940s
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
Poems by George Marion O'Donnell , 1933 - 1935, 1943
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.
Poems by Richard Croom Beatty, 1935 - 1936
This accession includes correspondence from "Ted" Theodore C. Hoepfner to "Sunny" Opal Virginia Combs Fields that spans several decades with poetry being a main topic of the conversations. Also included are poems and essays by Hoepfner, as well as George Marion O'Donnell and Richard Croom Beatty. Many of the poems and essays have handwritten edits.